1. 1. In-Person Events
  2. 2. Digital Services
  3. 3. Digital Products
  4. 4. Speaking Gigs
  5. 5. Authoring Books
  6. 6. Commercial, TV & Film
  7. 7. Guest Writing & Editorial Contributions
  8. 8. Full-Time Employment
  9. Bottom Line

The creator economy has matured well past the era of sponsored posts being a creator’s only income stream. As the industry grows, more brands are investing in influencers in a much bigger way, meaning that today’s top creators are turning into multi-hyphenate entrepreneurs building businesses with real staying power. Brand deals remain a part of the mix, but they’re no longer the whole story.

Creators are seeing the need to diversify their income streams because brand deals are inherently volatile. Between creator economy saturation, algorithm changes, budget cuts, and brand pivots, creators need multiple streams of income. From digital products to book deals, a new class of creator-entrepreneurs who use their audience as a launchpad is emerging.

People using social media are craving community, so it’s no surprise that in-person events are something that more and more creators are investing their energy into. Events put the creator fully in control, and they allow online communities to meet in real life and fostering even stronger relationships.

Jacklyn Romano , a creator and the founder of Sweat & Sculpt by Jac, created her fitness pop-up business directly from her online community. It was a natural extension of her influencer background, giving her the perfect foundation to host these events. She already knew what her audience wanted before she ever asked them to buy a ticket.

“The events have become a significant and rapidly growing portion of my income,” says Romano, “It’s transformed my business from being solely dependent on brand deals to having a diversified and much more stable income model.”

Creators have professional skills that brands desperately want, which is why we’re seeing more and more of them packaging those skills as services.

Jayde Powell , a freelance social media creative, turned creating content online into a diverse business where she steps into agencies as a strategist, creative director, or producer depending on what the account needs.

“Because my perspective is social-first, I’m offering a very digital-native, social media-focused lens on the work, which most brands are looking for,” says Powell. Often, traditional agency staff can’t create deliverables in the same way a creator can.

Michael Lemus , a bisexual Latino content creator with almost 50,000 followers on Instagram, is another example of just that.

“My experience as a creator helps me offer real-world insights to clients navigating the digital space,” says Lemus. Both Powell and Lemus are great examples that creators aren’t just content machines. They’re deeply skilled professionals who are able to offer a unique perspective for brands on their marketing and social media projects.

Digital products are a natural next step for many creators who have built online communities around a certain topic. Courses, templates, guides and paid membership communities are all options that allow creators to monetize their expertise at scale without trading time for dollars.

Remi Ishizuka , a creator and the founder of HomeBodies, built and Instagram following of over 1 million by opening sharing her healthy lifestyle online.

“After a decade of openly sharing fitness and wellness with an engaged audience, launching HomeBodies felt like a natural evolution,” notes Ali Grant, CO-CEO of The Digital Dept. and Ishizuka’s manager. The program lets her community workout “alongside her” while generating reliable recurring revenue on top of brand deals.

Ishizuka shows that digital products work best when they’re a logical extension of what a creator has already been giving away for free on socials.

Jess Bruno , a creator who brings major personality to her socials, recognized early that Instagram alone wasn’t a stable income strategy. She made it her mission to show up in spaces where her audience already existed.

After a year of laying the groundwork to be invited into rooms where she could share her knowledge, the bookings started flowing in.

“I’m now booking 1-2 paid speaking engagements every single month,” says Bruno, “The best part is they now reach out to me.”

Not only is she being paid rates starting at around $500 per gig, she’s also able to generate new leads for other income streams of hers, like digital products and services.

Gigi Robinson ’s path to becoming a published author was unconventional. She cold pitched A Kids Co., and when DK Books and Penguin Random House later acquired the series, she became a Penguin author overnight.

Not only has she been able to garner the credibility of being a published author at such a well-known publishing house, but the financial contribution of her book to her business goes beyond royalties. She’s been able to land more brand deals, get more consulting gigs and work with brands in other paid capacities.

“There’s a credibility shift that happens when you can hand someone a hardcover with your name on it from a publisher they recognize,” notes Robinson, “It opens doors I would have spent years trying to knock on otherwise.”

For creators with performance backgrounds or specialized skills, the entertainment world has become a genuine income streams — especially for those with a significant social media following. In fact, many auditions and castings ask for information about your social media as a prerequisite.

While Alex Wong still auditions like any working dancer/actor, his social presence has opened a new lane. Wong has seen a ton of crossover, like booking a dancing role in a project, then later being separately contracted for the social media campaign for that same project.

“Sometimes the projects look for people with a social media following to boost it," he says, “Generally the social media campaign pays more.”

7. Guest Writing & Editorial Contributions

While video content gets all the hype, written content can help creators build credibility in a different, often deeper way. Brianna Doe , a creator and founder of Verbatim, a marketing agency, leaned into writing on LinkedIn when everyone told her to pivot to video. This is exactly how brands and editors starting filling up her inbox with offers.

“It’s not the biggest line item in my revenue, but it helps a ton as a credibility and distribution play,” says Doe, “Every published piece sends people back to my own platforms.”

Those readers convert into brand partnerships, agency clients, and expanded reach, making guest writing a strategic investment, not just a side hustle.

Contrary to popular belief, not all creators want to create full-time, and Carly Chamerlik is a prime example of this. After 18 months and growing to about 70,000 followers, Chamerlik got a DM brand a brand that she organically talked about on socials. Her content acted as her resume, and they offered her a full-time remote job.

“Without content creation, I don’t think I would’ve been able to get in front of the right people in order to have this opportunity become reality,” Chamerlik says.

She now balances the stability of a corporate salary and benefits with the creative freedom of continuing to make content, and she says that the company is actively supportive of both.

These creators didn’t abandon their audiences to build businesses.. They built businesses because of their audience. Each income stream is proof that a creator’s most valuable asset isn’t their follower count, it’s the skills and trust that they’ve built.

The most successful creators are surrounding brand deals with income streams they now fully own and control. The creator economy’s next chapter is about going deep, building real businesses and becoming the kind of entrepreneur that doesn’t need to wait for a brand’s budget to get approved. The line between “influencer” and "entrepreneur" will continue to blur.